Issue Seven
Intercut
Issue Seven
Intercut
EDITORS-IN-CHIEF Julia Levine Annie Ning ART DIRECTOR Hannah Cooper FINANCIAL MANAGER Sophia Dienstag EDITORS Arnaav Bhavanani Clara Coggiano Sophia Dienstag Sarah Lucente Theo Matza Chase Mayo Olivia Miller Hannah Ratner Olive Wexler Sherwin Yu ILLUSTRATORS Candice Cirilo Sam Hill Leslie Rosario-Olivo Mary Ahlstrom Sivan Piatigorsky-Roth
Contents
why I’m watching THEO MATZA
1
I Just Can’t Quit You, Ang Lee JACK WARREN
7
Art and Investment: The Economics of Adaptation in Film TOM HANES
19
Down Below: The Symbolism of Basements in Bong Joon-ho’s Barking Dogs Never Bite, Memories of Murder, and Parasite MARCEL THOMPSON
27
Still A Part of It: Growing Up New York, New York HANNAH CARROLL
41
Combating Colonial Structures through Local Senegalese Cinema SAM LETER
51
Screenwriting Interviews JULIA LEVINE
67
Dear Reader,
Recently,
alongside
the
protests, police brutality, and conversations towards antiracism,
INTERCUT, like everything else
we have been witnessing a call for
these past few months, has been
major shifts in the film and media
greatly altered by circumstances
world (including within our own
in the world outside of our control.
film department at Wesleyan by
We regret that we weren’t able to
artists, writers + activists who
publish a print issue this semester
have been deeply questioning
due to the covid-19 pandemic.
the overwhelming whiteness of
Still, we wanted to honor the
those in power. Collectively, we
hard work, thoughtful ideas, and
interrogate who gets heard at the
creativity of our writers, editors,
table, and who is even present in
and artists by putting out a virtual
the first place. This is a crucial
magazine nonetheless. This issue
time to pay attention to these
comes to you from contributors
conversations. To listen to the
scattered far and wide who took
voices emerging right in front
on the challenge of adding to our
of us that have been waiting for
publication amidst the transition
a very long time. To love what
to online classes and the difficulties
we watch on our screens deeply
of quarantine, and this issue exists
but care for the people & stories
because of their efforts.
beyond them even more.
From directors, producers, and
perspectives is not only heard, but
production crews to the world
amplified.
of film criticism and writing, we must work to decenter the
As we leave Intercut to the next year
white and Western film canon
of writers and the next and the
in
scholarship,
next, we hope that this space will
and practice. We look towards
continue to grow and consciously
the CFILM department with
reckon with the role of race, the
an
greater
power of authorship and the
accountability in acknowledging
responsibility that publications,
and undoing their own racism. In
including ours, have in this.
our
thinking,
expectation
for
addition, we look within ourselves as film artists and writers and ask
Read on to learn about the film
how writing on film must create
industry in Senegal, the case for
spaces for speaking on issues
Ang Lee’s place in our canon, the
of
role of basements in Bong Joon-
white
supremacy,
racism,
and the historical exclusion of Black voices in film writing and scholarship. There is an urgent need for stronger representation in authorship. This is how a true representation of
voices and
ho’s filmography, and more.
With love, J U LI A LEVI NE + ANN IE N ING ED I TO RS-I N-CHIE F
Here is a list of some resources and writing that address the film and media landscape. It is our hope that you will use and engage with them in conversation with the articles in this issue:
Open Letter to the Wesleyan Film Department https://tinyurl.com/y9cvblhr
Sonya Childress: A Reckoning (The Documentary Film Industry Must Chart A New Path Forward) https://medium.com/@sonya.childress/a-reckoning-526bb97ca60b
@imanimdavis, Diversify Your Critics Today https://www.instagram.com/p/CBcMGSlDvLA/?igshid=laeerkrny46z
@paintherlex @rhearhea_, Racism In the Arts https://www.instagram.com/p/CBTZeXClSJS/?igshid=18xtoaide91qa
Tambay Obenson, IndieWire Critics Roundtable: #blackAF and the Dilemmas of Black Criticism https://www.indiewire.com/2020/06/indiewire-critics-roundtable-blackaf-1202227144/
@panavisionofficial, @MalakaiTheBrave. BIPOC Cinematographers, Camera Assistants, and Camera Technicians to Support https://www.instagram.com/p/CBobEsZpwJv/?igshid=16q2s82jg6vvb
@FreeTheWork Instagram account, Resources for BIPOC Queer and Trans Creators, Must-Know Black Filmmaker Collectives and Platforms https://instagram.com/freethework?igshid=kabavou8nwud
Miranda Hoyt: Capitalism, White Supremacy, and You: The Ulterior Motives of Romcoms https://www.themarysue.com/netflix-you-capitalism-white-supremacy/
INTERCUT
why I’m watching
WRI T T EN BY T HEO MATZ A I L LUST RAT ED BY CAND IC E C IRILO 1
LIGHTS ARE ONLY ON in
like a silent image of a hand,
the hallway and the kitchen,
belonging to a young child
and for some reason or other
whom I do not know personally,
I decide to notice these details
drawing a stick figure on a
right now. I just walked into my
piece of lined paper. Someone
parents’ apartment, the same
managed
one I have been coming home
madness in me, and I am
to forever. This will be the last
allowing myself to be hauled in
time I come in from the outside
by it.
to
prompt
this
in who knows how long. I’ve done dinner and a movie with a
By now you deserve to have had
dear friend, one who I know—
a viewing experience that felt
given what is happening in the
like it existed only for you. To
world right now, and the reality
sense that you have somehow
that he lives thousands of miles
parked yourself seamlessly in
away—I will not be seeing
the correct space, at promptly,
again for some time. Sitting in a
unwaveringly the right time.
theater with him is not like doing
Whether or not you chose to
it with most people. He wants to
wait for that overpriced crater
be wide open, to let in and be let
of only faintly stale nachos,
in. I always tell him how much
whether you remembered to
I appreciate this. Afterwards, he
bring your stained, unwashed
tells me he hopes we will get to
hoodie with you to the theater
do this again sometime soon.
(because, even though it’s July, it is never not frigid in there),
My favorite films are about
whether it was even a movie that
the details. I have just been
you happened to be watching
prompted to cry over something
in the first place—it matters.
2
INTERCUT
Those details culminate in a
atrocious
McCartney
feeling that exists, and as wince-
inspired bowl-cut as I cried
worthy as it might sound, the
and then wailed some more.
kind that I am talking about
For all I know, that was the
cannot be replaced. If you are
day the fake cheese-dip forever
already pinning me for being
marked my then oversized gray
unfounded, gushy, or unduly-
sweatshirt. But that’s only the
romantic, what I have to say is
classic
that this will not work for you
the sort of private rapture I am
if you do not want to be wide
talking about is not so simple
open. More often than not, if
and wonderfully cliché as when
you need to feel, on some level
a trip to the movies carries an
you have to ask for it.
overt tie to a life event that you
example.
(Paul)-
Sometimes,
happen to be enduring yourself. My first experience with the
3
above was after I got dumped in
It could really be as simple as
the sixth grade. My twin sister
sitting alone in a theater at
took me to Crazy Stupid Love, a
college on a night where you’re
flick in which, coincidentally, a
recovering from a cold. Snow
middle school boy, as he often
(the ugly-wet kind) is pummeling
does, comes to terms with having
out there. You haven’t seen
been infatuated with someone
anyone in days. It’s the end of
who would not recipcrocate his
Wong Kar Wai’s Fallen Angels,
passion. You bet gargantuan
and the purging “Only You” by
pockets of tears collected and
The Flying Pickets booms on
fell from my fleshy eleven year-
the speakers as two lost souls
old eye sockets, my blinking wet
ride off into the night on a
lashes grazing the fringes of my
motorcycle. They’re still lonely,
of course, but for an instant
is watching you than it is when
they feel transported by their
you are revealing to those close
togetherness. And you, having
to you that you need some space
been away from your friends,
during this calamitous time, or
hibernating in your room with
when you are burying a family
now empty boxes of Day-Quil
member, or even looking at
and EmergenC, get to ride off
yourself in the mirror.
with another sort of companion. I had not been giving myself This method of purely self-
over to the movies lately, instead
relational viewing was at one
finding myself
point enough for me, but as
in my chair and crashing even
I have grown older, an issue
if it was the middle of the
has arisen. Sitting in four to
day, locking my eyes with the
five screenings a week for class,
periphery of the screen, only
writing papers on the historical,
scratching
thematic, and stylistic traits of
had convinced myself that it
Ford westerns or contemporary
was unfair of me not to be
international art cinema, I have
confronting the real world by
begun to reassess why it is that I
losing myself in what is up
watch. I have started to question
there. I feared I was being
the value of thinking of visual
quixotic, selfish, and pathetic by
media as something that exists
immersing myself in stories that
to move you in a world so
were not my own for the sole
ceaselessly affected on a colossal
purpose of escaping my own
scale. It makes you happy to be
story. But then I realized that
vulnerable, and it is easier to do
being shaped by someone else’s
so in a dark room when no one
experience
sliding down
their
is
surface.
I
fundamentally
4
INTERCUT
about learning to let yourself
recently deceased in choosing
relate,
simply
a single memory from their
knowing that you should. It is
lives to take with them onward.
not the artist’s job to ask you to
While the film is overtly about
try.
the nature of
more
than
remembrance,
to me it was about practicing It’s perhaps even simpler for
reflection.
most of us to just drift in and
an image, an impression, or
out of
spaces without ever
a sound, to focus on the little
investing, laughing at moments
things bears more value than
that are meant to be poignant,
we often choose to acknowledge.
talking over people on screen
This feels especially true right
and off so as to feel our own
now. With the boundless crater
presence. There must be more
of momentary distraction to
to watching, more to studying,
which we have access, it has felt
more of a reason to understand
a remarkably simple maneuver
all of
not to be present.
this than the extent
Whether
through
to which it provides us with security.
We spent a lot of time during the first sixty minutes of the
5
Now, all the streets in the most
movie with the individual voices
beautiful cities in the world
of people, old and young, as
are empty. Tonight I was in
they recounted their memories
a theater for the last time in
into the lens. Even the most
what will likely be months, in a
sophisticated viewer could not
world classified by uncertainty.
take in or apply importance to
The film was Hirokazu Kore-
every one of these words. It was
eda’s After Life, which follows
left up to me to choose when to
a fictional sort of purgatory in
engage, when to listen, when to
which a staff of people assist the
take in the beauty of a rose petal
that a humble old woman once
than I thought. They help you
retrieved from her backyard, or
to access your own person, not
the look in a man’s eye when he
just to escape yourself when you
contemplates his existence and
do not know where you’re going.
realizes that he never took much
It’s like getting yourself to go
agency in his time here, or the
to therapy, in that you have to
steam rising out of a woman’s
put yourself in that room, you
tea cup, catching the grains
have to make an agreement
of daylight through an open
to unlock yourself before you
window while she weeps for her
can mobilize, before you can
long lost love. There’s a poetic
receive anything of value. You
line from the film that I have
have to be constantly adjusting
been repeating in my head since
your perspective, altering the
the moment I heard it. One of
vantage point from which you
the staff at the facility casually
are assessing your processes of
remarks to his colleague,
feeling, thinking, being.
“The moon stays the same, but it looks
I want to realize that I am
different depending on the angle of
seeing. I want to notice the
the light.”
details. I want to be a little more present. It’s okay to forget about
That film will stay the same,
it, it’s okay to remember that it
but the angle from which I
happened. High highs and low
allow myself to approach it
lows, no matter where in the
will fluctuate. I’ve always joked
theater, or where in the world,
that I considered the movies to
we are sitting. You must want to
be my main source of therapy,
let in and to be let in. Yes it’s
but now I know that if you
about me, but it’s also about
let them they may serve that
you, and even if haunting, that’s
purpose on a more serious level
pretty damn electrifying.
6
INTERCUT
I Just Can’t Quit You, Ang Lee WRI T T EN BY J ACK WARRE N I L LU ST RAT ED BY SA M H ILL
7
THE
PROCESS
OF
film
for Lee’s innovative use of 3D,
failures is debatable, but they
canonization is one of unifying
which won over skeptic Roger
are indicative of a forward-
the personal with the universal
Ebert, who noted that he had
thinking spirit prevalent across
and the marginal with the
“never seen the medium better
Lee’s filmography. While neither
mainstream, and few directors
employed, not even in Avatar”
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
embody
this
and that it “deepen[s] the film’s
nor Brokeback Mountain feature
so
Ang
sense of places and events.”
the technological novelty of
beginning among the ranks
For Gemini Man (and its $10
a film like Life of Pi, they are
of his surname-sharing NYU
million-losing predecessor Billy
representative of a filmmaking
classmate Spike as a trailblazer
Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk), Lee
style that always pushes forward
of
has moved on to high frame
and never looks back. Crouching
to
rate filmmaking as his next
Tiger,
Hollywood
frontier, describing the form in
Brokeback Mountain twist familiar
to
an interview with Polygon as
genres
technological experimentation
“…unlike anything. It looks a
directions, experimenting with
in cinema, whether it leads to
lot like a movie we used to see.
film form and advancing public
blockbuster or blow-up; 2012’s
But it seems to feel more like
perception of
Life of Pi scored a worldwide
life. It’s more immersive. It feels
Using an expansive narrative
gross of over $600 million—the
like you’re more experiencing it,
range and cavernous narrative
highest of his career—while
living that life.”
depth, Lee creates achingly real
than
Lee.
more Despite
independent cinema, his
reputation something mad
process
has of
scientist,
shifted a
dedicated
2019’s Gemini Man is expected to
Hidden
into
Dragon
new
and
narrative
their subjects.
characters out of archetypal
lose $75 million (McClintock).
The canonical significance of
icons, delivering accessible films
Life of Pi was well regarded
these commercial and critical
that challenge audiences to piece
8
INTERCUT
together the lives of characters
wuxia
using narrative parallels. Lee’s
adventures of heroic martial
stylistic
support
artists Li Mu Bai and Shu
his narrative decisions, with
Lien (played by Hong Kong
cinematography
editing
action legends Chow Yun-fat
helping to ground viewers in
and Michelle Yeoh) as they
character perspective and juggle
struggle against the nefarious
genre expectations. Together,
Jade Fox (Cheng Pei-pei) and
these formal choices create
train
a unique viewing experience
Jen (Zhang Ziyi), but Lee turns
that introduces audiences to
the blade of
perspectives they would not
inward, subverting tropes and
otherwise be exposed to.
pushing the film beyond its
tendencies
and
film,
hotshot
chronicling
the
up-and-comer
the narrative
genre tendencies. In his article
9
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
“Globalizing Chinese Martial
and Brokeback Mountain both
Arts Cinema: The Global-Local
feature archetypal iconography
Alliance and the Production
that harken to popular genres
of
of
The
Dragon,” Wu Huaiting writes
swordsman and the cowboy are
that “vengeance is one of the
icons of idealistic masculinity,
most…indispensable plots of
championing the victory of
wuxia” films, but such a plot is
a hero over a villain through
complicated in Crouching Tiger.
violence.
glance,
Rather than follow a single
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
character thread as a wronged
would appear to follow the
hero pursues justice, Lee weaves
format of a typical Chinese
a rich tapestry of character
action
filmmaking.
On
first
Crouching
Tiger,
Hidden
perspective, including Jade Fox
cathartic defeat of the villain,
emphasizing the skill of the
and Jen (Wu). When Jen betrays
the expanded range and depth
fighters rather than the force of
Jade Fox in order to go rogue,
of
in
each blow. This is particularly
Lee uses close-up to grant the
Crouching Tiger forces viewers to
evident in the treetop fight
viewer more access to Fox’s
consider the viewpoints of all of
between Li Mu Bai and Jen, in
interiority
those involved in the violence.
which long, sweeping camera
than
is
common
character
narration
for the antagonist of a wuxia
movements follow the fighters
film. Instead of disappearing
Lee’s subversion of genre tropes
as they dance through the air in
in smoke or cackling through
is supported by his suppression
wide shots, sometimes cutting
an
of the revenge plot in favor
to POVs as the characters come
commands viewer attention as
of
closer to understanding one
she experiences anger, betrayal,
relationships.
and rejection from her pupil.
vendetta against Jade Fox is
When she leaves, the camera
introduced in the first scene, but
Brokeback Mountain is harder than
follows her outside, and rather
only after the romantic tension
Crouching Tiger to categorize,
than appear menacing, Jade
between him and Shu Lien is
utilizing western iconography
Fox shrinks sorrowfully within
established. The vendetta plot
in the context of a romantic
the frame. Instead of quickly
motivates
stunning
melodrama. Ennis Del Mar and
establishing the new narrative
action
but
by
Jack Twist (Heath Ledger and
information—that Jen no longer
preventing it from dominating
Jake Gyllenhaal, respectively)
serves Jade Fox—Lee lingers on
the narrative, Lee maintains
are
the relationship between the
the humanity of each character.
tumultuously and gloriously in
two women, further establishing
This is reinforced by the stylistic
love while assigned to herd sheep
them as characters and leaning
editing and cinematography of
across the Wyoming mountains
into themes of
generational
the fight sequences. Lee often
in
the
summer
of
conflict. While a typical Wuxia
captures several hits and/or
Brokeback
Mountain
chronicles
film may culminate in the
acrobatic moves in each cut,
how their clandestine affair
evil
monologue,
Fox
characters’
interpersonal Li
visually
sequences,
Mu
Bai’s
another.
two
cowboys
who
fall
1963.
10
impacts the rest of their lives,
while his use of a wide narrative
reverse-shot
including
relationships
range forces audience members
direct perceptual subjectivity
with their wives, Alma and
to contend with the impact of
POV shots offer narrative depth
Lureen (Michelle Williams and
that relationship on the lives of
for
Anne Hathway). Here, Lee’s
other characters.
express
their
use of narrative depth helps
11
sequences
characters
who
themselves
and
cannot verbally
and communicate information
to tell the story of romantic
Lee’s tendency towards the
audiences are accustomed to
heroes whose relationship must
close-up takes on even greater
receiving less subtly. The “meet-
be hidden within the margins,
presence in Brokeback.
cute” trope of the romance film
Shot-
is ubiquitous, but Jack and Ennis
a rear-view mirror. Lee is able
Lureen, which gets them out of
are not afforded such delights.
to make viewers’ feel Jack and
the bar and into the backseat
Their
wordless,
Ennis’ initial attraction to one
of a car with their clothes off in
consisting of a series of ever
another, while simultaneously
seven shots. Instead, Lee builds
tighter
communicating the danger of
the tension over the first 20
the two looking at one another,
that attraction. A heterosexual
scenes, mostly built around one
then glancing away before the
version
might
character watching the other.
other can notice, followed by
begin far more like Jack’s first
The exception to prove the rule
a POV shot of Ennis through
encounter with his wife-to-be,
occurs when Ennis changes in
meeting
is
shot-reverse-shots
of
of
this
film
12
INTERCUT
13
the background, out of focus,
from consummating their love,
choice to stay with Alma drives
while the viewers watch Jack
but is complicated through the
the viewer to consider Jack
in
uncomfortable
narrative range’s incorporation
and Ennis’ relationship as a
with just how much he wants
of Alma perspective (Bettinson).
threat to Alma’s marriage. This
to turn around. This degree of
By suppressing Alma from the
literally forces the audience to
narrative depth allows viewers
narrative until Jack and Ennis’
see Jack and Ennis from a new
to
feelings
return from Brokeback Mountain,
perspective. While Alma never
they are accustomed to being
Lee allows the audience to
dominates the film, the film’s
communicated through grand
invest fully in the melodrama
wide narrative range prevents
romantic acts and gestures that
of Jack and Ennis’ relationship.
her from being characterized
are inaccessible to Jack and
Their boss, Joe Aguirre (Randy
as purely antagonistic. This
Ennis.
Quaid) is the closest Lee comes
choice encourages viewers to
a melodramatic villain, acting as
conceptualize Jack and Ennis
Not unlike the wuxia film, the
a bigoted arm of fate preventing
as not just archetypal lovers
romantic melodrama frequently
Jack and Ennis’ romance. Joe is
but real people doomed not
drowns out the perspectives of
always framed larger than Jack
by fate but by systems of toxic
others in favor of its primary
and Ennis, and a binocular
masculinity and homophobia
players. Lee subverts this trope
POV shot of Joe observing the
that are injurious not only to
by complicating Jack and Ennis’
couple suggests omnipotence.
them but everyone in their lives.
epic
Lee departs from this more
close-up,
experience
romance
the
through
the
subjectivities of those around
melodramatic
them.
melodrama
the scene of Jack and Ennis’
Lee films come to life on
“attests to the disempowerment
reunion, when he cuts from
screen, transcending familiar
of the individual by nonmaterial,
Alma’s POV of the lovers kissing
genre
omnipotent,
apparently
to a series of shots following
expectation. While much of this
acausal phenomena” which can
her back into the apartment.
is through the expanded access
be applied to the social forces
In contrast with Joe’s gaze as a
provided by narrative range
preventing
threat to Jack and Ennis, Lee’s
and depth, Lee also pushes
Romantic
and
Jack
and
Ennis
framework
in
The
characters
tropes
and
of
Ang
audience
audiences to piece together
only reunited when Shu Lien
meaning as it occurs across the
and Li Mu Bai are torn apart
visual and narrative parallels
by the one force stronger than
in characters’ lives. Jack and
Bai’s jade sword—death. By
Ennis’ Thankgivings are seen
experiencing Jen and Lo’s past
one after the other, drawing
in conjunction with Li Mu Bai
attention to their difference in
and Shu Lien’s unseen history,
class and how that has impacted
the viewer is left with the feeling
their lives. This is observable in
that they have experienced both
the framing of the families, but
couples’ pasts. Rather than
also in smaller details, such as
leave viewers with single legible
the clean slice of an expensive
character arcs, Lee presents
knife compared to the whir of
them with an untangleable mess
a cheap electric carver. These
of lives, each informing the
comparisons create feeling in the
other and creating meaning for
viewer without verbalizing an
viewer’s to unpack ad infinitum.
explanation, allowing audiences to interrogate the construction
Beyond character and genre,
of the film and think about the
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
lives being presented to them.
and Brokeback Mountain offer
In Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,
viewers new experiences on
Shu Lien references a romantic
a cultural and historical level.
past with Li Mu Bai, but the
In a global market flooded
audience never sees it. In the
with Hollywood film, Crouching
same scene, Jen experiences
Tiger
her first flashback to her time
transnational film production
in the desert with her lover, Lo
that remains unparalleled. It
(Chang Chen). Lo and Jen are
remains the highest grossing
created
a
model
for
14
INTERCUT
foreign language film in the
in the English language—stars a
conventional genre by the horns
U.S., earning more than the
predominantly Indian cast and
and wrestled it into a tale of
next two films combined. In
earned over $484 million of its
homosexual love emotionally
addition to the number of
$600 million overseas. As the
positioned to ensnare a general
countries involved in financing,
world becomes more globalized,
audience” (Rich). By making a
shooting, and crewing the film,
Crouching
an
star-studded, Oscar-nominated
the storytelling is a blend of
important step in the creation
movie about queerness, Lee
cultural
of a hit movie that balances
brought
describes Crouching Tiger, Hidden
cultural
the
Dragon as “a Hong Kong martial
of
commodifying or paving
queer love among the great
arts
borrows
over them, and Lee deserves
love stories of cinema history.
Hollywood
recognition for such a historic
While Lee himself
westerns, Greek tragedy, Beijing
success.
returned to queer romance
opera,
dance;
Released one day and five years
outside
spiritually, it is rooted in the
later, Brokeback Mountain was
in Taking Woodstock, Brokeback
ancient Chinese philosophy of
historic in its own right. While
Mountain opened the door for a
Taoism as well as in western
it was not the first “gay” film,
generation of queer love stories
philosophy like individualism
film scholar B. Ruby Rich writes
from Carol to Call Me By Your
or feminism.” This was a task
that “there has never been a
Name to Love, Simon.
uniquely suited to Ang Lee, as
film by a brand-name director,
evidenced by the later success
packed with A-list Hollywood
Not every film by Ang Lee has
Pi, which—while
stars at the peak of their careers,
been historic. Hulk tries tackling
being an American production
that has taken an established
the superhero genre with the
traditions.
movie,
heavily
of
15
[that]
from
dramas
Life of
Huaiting
and
Tiger
marks
influences
instead
the
marginal
mainstream,
a
to
canonizing
has not
character
detail
same character-focussed trope-
may not be the hyperreality of
While an institution cannot
defying sensibility, to resounding
120 fps, but it is bold progress
have the “personal” connection
commercial and critical failure.
nonetheless.
to film that Lupo references
But unlike many auteurs who go
specifically, the canon must
through long periods of success
As
a
school
or failure, Ang Lee’s career has
educating
to
resonate with a global student
filmmakers,
population dedicated to social
been a roller coaster of ups and
it is only right that Wesleyan
justice, and as such should
down, each film an experiment
make a place within its canon
reflect films that have expanded
distinct from the last. When
for a trailblazer like Ang Lee to
public consciousness. In “The
describing his most recent foray
pass his torch. Neither the AFI
Politics of Film Canons”, Janet
into high-frame rate filmmaking,
nor Sight and Sound cite any
Steiger writes that film canons
Lee told The Guardian: “I know
of Lee’s films among their “Top
must ensure “selection is made
I’m gonna get beat up. But I
100” list, and the creation of a
with an awareness of the politics
have to keep trying. I’m carrying
Wesleyan Canon must recognize
of the chosen criteria and with
a torch for the next level of film-
the
globally
a politics of eliminating power
makers.” Crouching Tiger, Hidden
influential director. According
of some groups over others, of
Dragon and Brokeback Mountain
to Jonathan Lupo in his article,
centering at the expense of
work
are culturally and historically
“Loaded
distinct landmarks built on the
canon
dedicated
future
of
this
Canons”,
a
marginalizing classes, genders,
“privilege…the
sexual orientations, or cultures,”
command and subversion of
personal over the ‘staid’ greatest
which is particularly important
genre tropes designed to create a
criterion,” and Ang Lee’s body
to consider when taking into
dramatic, cinematic experience
of work reflects both the student
account the biases of a film
that resonates as true. That
body and its academic aims.
department that is primarily
must
such
16
INTERCUT
17
white, male, and American.
of an audience and push the
Being representative of a film
medium. This canon should
studies institution, the Wesleyan
include films designed to satisfy
Canon should also focus upon
viewers and challenge them,
works that both exemplify the
be they popular or obscure.
conventions
genre
Films in the Wesleyan Film
and subvert them, illustrating
Canon should advance student
the ways in which filmmakers’
knowledge, whether it be in the
artistic and narrative proclivities
understanding of film form or
interact with the expectations
of their own classmates.
of
their
Works Cited Staiger, Janet. “The Politics of Film Canons.” Cinema Journal, vol. 24, no. 3, 1985, p. 4. McClintock, Pamela. “Box Office Bust: ‘Gemini Man’ Faces $75 Million Loss.” The Hollywood Reporter, 20 Oct. 2019. Ebert, Roger. “Life of Pi Movie Review & Film Summary (2012): Roger Ebert.” RogerEbert.com, 20 Nov. 2012. Patches, Matt. “Gemini Man Director Ang Lee Can’t Unsee the Magic of 120 Frames per Second.” Polygon, Polygon, 10 Oct. 2019. Wu, Huaiting; Chan, Joseph M. (2007). “Globalizing Chinese Martial Arts Cinema: The Global-Local Alliance and the Production of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”. Media, Culture & Society. 29 (2). Bettinson, Gary. The Sensuous Cinema of Wong Kar-Wai. Film Poetics and the Aesthetic of Disturbance. Hong Kong University Press, 2015. Rich, Ruby. “B Ruby Rich on Brokeback Mountain.” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, 23 Sept. 2005. Gilbey, Ryan. “Ang Lee: ‘I Know I’m Gonna Get Beat up. But I Have to Keep Trying’.” The Guardian, Guardian News and Media, 3 Oct. 2019. Lupo, Jonathan. “Loaded Canons: Contemporary Film Canons, Film Studies, and Film Discourse.” The Journal of American Culture, vol. 34, no. 3, 2011, pp. 219–233.
18
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Art and Investment: The Economics of Adaptation W R IT T E N BY TO M HANES
in Film
IL LU ST R AT E D BY MARY AHLST RO M 19
IT IS A COMMON REFRAIN among cultural curmudgeons that Hollywood has lost its creative
spark
bloated,
overly
and
become
reliant
on
remakes and CGI amusement rides that Martin Scorsese would not even refer to as cinema. This decline in originality and artistic
92nd Academy Awards, despite
real story. Hollywood, especially
production
Hollywood
the Oscar’s long standing bias
in its larger budget features,
culminated in the victory of
in favor of American film. But
has always been the adaptation
Parasite for Best Picture at the
a lack of originality is not the
business.
in
20
INTERCUT
21
In 1939, as in 2019, nearly all of the highest grossing films in the American box office were sequels or adaptations of some sort. Most familiar to us is The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, dazzling in its spectacle, an adaptation
by the screenwriter Lewis R.
of L. Frank Baum’s children’s
Foster. Further high grossing
not an adaptation, kept much of
novel of 40 years prior. The
films included two biographies:
the cast of the previous year’s
highest grossing by far was Gone
Jesse James and The Story of
smash hit Robin Hood, including
with the Wind, an adaptation of
Vernon and Irene Castle, though
the leading couple of Errol
the novel by Margaret Mitchell
the word “biography” is here
Flynn and Olivia deHavilland.
with few changes except for the
used
Several
All in all, 9 of the top 10
obligatory reduction of the size
more novel adaptations were
grossing films were adaptations
of the main character’s family.
big hits, including The Rains
of some sort.
Next, the well remembered
Came, Goodbye Mr. Chips, and The
Mr. Smith Goes to Washington was
Hunchback of Notre Dame, and
2019 had a similar ratio of
in fact loosely based on “The
Gunga Din, influenced both by
adaptations to originals in its
Gentleman
the Kipling poem and a short
own
story cycle concerning the wars
films.
between the British Raj and
non-adaptation
the Thuggee. But that’s not all.
Peele’s Us, the 12th overall.
Babes in Arms was reworked from
However, even Us is a spiritual
a recent Broadway hit. The last
successor to his previous Get
in the top ten, Dodge City, though
Out. This parallels Dodge City’s
an
from
unpublished
Montana”, short
story
quite
loosely.
top
grossing
The
highest was
domestic grossing Jordan
relationship to Robin Hood. The rest of the top 12 comprised two sequels of Disney hits and two separate refilmings of existing Disney
hits,
three
Marvel
22
INTERCUT
bonanzas, three other sequels:
The upshot is that the big budget
The Rise of Skywalker, Jumanji:
film has never been the place
The Next Level, and It Chapter
for wholly original storytelling.
Two and, rounding out the list,
Adaptations have always been
Joker, which not only adapts the
the bread and butter of the
D.C. Comic villain but heavily
box
borrows from Scorsese’s vision
being the alternative route to
of New York in the ‘70s.
wallet shattering success. In
office,
with
star-power
some ways, this is economics.
23
Most of the Great Films are
The larger a production is, the
adapted from novels, plays, or
larger a risk it is for the studio,
short stories, especially in higher
and the more sensible it is to
budget genres like action and
adapt rather than create afresh.
science fiction: The Godfather,
Last year, Universal Pictures
Lawrence of
Arabia, Goodfellas,
had only around $4 billion in
Apocalypse Now, 2001: A Space
revenue, but the budget for a
Odyssey and A Clockwork Orange,
major blockbuster can run up
The Third Man, Vertigo and Psycho,
to $350-400 million. A single
Throne of Blood, Ikiru, Rashomon,
large production is a major
Bicycles Thieves, Casablanca, Blade
investment.
Runner, Stagecoach, Jurassic Park,
intellectual property to adapt
Rosemary’s Baby, It’s a Wonderful
provides both market testing
Life, All About Eve, Full Metal
(after all, it succeeded in the
Jacket,
pre-existing
and
Schindler’s
List,
A
pre-existing
version)
and
a
among others. Some Like it Hot,
sure audience. On top of this,
The Departed, and A Fistful of
the value of an adaptation to
Dollars were remakes of foreign
the consumer is much higher
films as well as, of course, The
in
Magnificent Seven.
where filmmaking technology
the
big-budget
market,
(particularly CGI) can lead to a
ways to use an adaptation, two
of the former type in the series
meaningfully different viewing
reasons to repurpose an existing
of
experience
be
intellectual property rather than
classical plays and novels from
provided in 1939, or even 1986.
produce one from scratch. The
between 1990 and 2005, usually
Technology could not improve
first is that the material to adapt
set in the modern era and
The Graduate, but might make a
is good, or at least likeable, so
usually in a high school: Clueless,
difference to You Only Live Twice.
an adaptation will bring butts
10 Things I Hate about You,
Note that we do not remake
to seats by positive reviews and
Metropolitan, Bridget Jones’ Diary,
novels.
word of mouth. The alternative
and Romeo + Juliet. Many of these
is that the adaptation will bring
did minimal marketing based on
in viewers based on the existing
their original content, or none
reputation
adapted
at all. It remains a matter of
to Hollywood’s very success.
material. Perhaps people have
debate whether Whit Stillman’s
In 1939, most of the cultural
fond memories of the original,
Metropolitan is intended as an
touchstones Americans shared
want to see what will happen
adaptation of Mansfield Park or
were novels and plays, offering
to
characters,
a general homage to Austen’s
a wealth of stories to throw
or expect the adaptation to
ouvre. Part of the trend of these
onto the big screen. In contrast,
match up in quality to the first
classical adaptations resulted
much more existing content as
production.
the
from the hope that Austen and
of today began as film—A Star is
two purposes of
adaptation
Shakespeare fans would come to
Born (2016) would not have been
are not mutually exclusive, and
see their favorite works adapted,
the fourth film of the same story
even productions of the purest
and by the turn of the millenium
if there had not already been
intention
ignore
surely studios had smelled the
a century of cinema history in
the
market
commercial winds and went
which to film it three previous
an adaptation based on the
where the money was, but part
times.
popularity of what they adapt.
of the motivation behind these
The
than
rising
remakes
may
could
influence be
of
attributed
their
of
the
favorite
Of
will
course,
rarely
opportunity
to
successful adaptations of
films is that the stories had been But that’s not the whole story.
But the distinction is still useful.
well liked for centuries, so they
Roughly speaking, there are two
We see a fairly clear example
would surely be enjoyed again. 24
INTERCUT
In
contrast,
value
of
the idiosyncratic spelling. If
and new artistic techniques
adaptation
is
The Shop Around the Corner were
make
quite clearly in brute name
remade today, it would not be
generated images which would
recognition. Joker has many
called You’ve Got Mail. It would
have been unthinkable a decade
merits,
have been called The Shop Around
ago, but the improvements in
the Corner.
visual
the
modern
the
especially
Joaquin
Phoenix’s performance, and it did quite well in award shows
technology
computer
may
well
slow. After all, it’s been a long
around the globe. It succeeds
It is perfectly plausible that the
time since anyone has improved
as a film. Yet, it had no obvious
domination of the adaptation-
the flush toilet (revolutionary in
narrative reason to be a D.C.
for-adaptation’s-sake
a
our grandparents’ grandparents’
comics adaptation; the story
temporary phenomenon. Slowly,
time). So, perhaps soon, the
tonally matched a Houellebecq
the thrill of seeing our favorite
money will again not be in
novel
than
characters will decline as we see
showing
anything printed with a gloss
more and more of them. Every
they wanted to see, but what
coat. The reason to use the IP
year, increasing computer power
surprises them. Perhaps not.
more
closely
was rather that without the DC name the same story could not have made $1.074 billion on a $60 million budget, the most profitable comic book movie ever made. We may observe this pattern in titling decisions. The recent remakes
Shaft,
Dumbo,
The
Lion King, Hellboy, Pet Sematary, Aladdin, Jacob’s Ladder, Men in Black: International, The Addams Family, The Grudge, and Charlie’s Angels in 2019 all kept exactly or
approximately
the
same
titles as their original releases, in some cases even down to
25
possible
is
people
what
knew
26
INTERCUT
Down Below:
The Symbolism of Basements in Bong Joon-ho’s Barking Dogs Never Bite, Memories of Murder, and Parasite 27
IN RECENT YEARS, Bong
subversion of expectations, one
Joon-ho has become one the
of his films’ most important
most well-known and respected
features is their outstanding and
South Korean movie directors
breathtaking set design. Bong
in the world. The ultimate
uses the physical structure of his
consecration came with Parasite,
sets to communicate ideas and
which won the Palme d’Or at
themes through a meticulous
the 2019 Cannes Film Festival
architecture. One of the most
and four Oscars at the 2020
recurrent structures of his set
Academy Awards, including the
designs are basements; as critic
Best Picture award. However,
Giovanni Camia writes in his
reducing
stellar
review of Parasite, “basements
filmography to his latest movie
are a recurring motif in Bong
would be a disservice. Since the
Joon-ho’s cinema: from the
mid-90s Bong has produced
tunnels
some of contemporary cinema’s
apartment building of Barking
most remarkable and innovative
Dogs Never Bite (2000), to the
films. While they have gained
torture chambers in Memories of
attention mostly for their vast
Murder (2003) and Okja (2017),
array of fascinating characters,
to the monster’s lair in The
breathtaking
cinematography,
Host (2006), these underground
and their dark comedy and
spaces are where society keeps
Bong’s
running
below
the
WR I TTE N BY M ARCEL T HO M P SO N ILLUST R AT E D BY CAND I CE CI RI LO 28
INTERCUT
its most sordid secrets locked up and out of sight, only to have them resurface with a vengeance.” While we could analyze the set designs of all of Bong’s films, I will focus specifically on his first feature film as a director (Barking Dogs Never Bite), his first commercial success (Memories of Murder), and his lastest and most critically
in America was familiar with
acclaimed
to
these types of crimes and was
explore how basements are used
more advanced than any other
as physical embodiments of
country in their investigative
themes such as violence, secrets,
strategies
murder, and social conflict.
Korean police and detectives
film
(Parasite),
and
technologies,
had no such experience. Beyond In Bong’s cinema the meaning
that, there was an overall lack
and symbolism of the basement
of preparation on the part of
varies according to the movie. In
the Korean legal system in
Memories of Murder, the basement
dealing with the procedures
audience the ways it went wrong
is a no-rights zone, where man
necessary to investigate serial
and the lasting impact it had on
expresses
natural
killings. As film critic Chris
the country and Korean society.
instincts, his inherent violence.
Newell explains in his analysis,
most
Memories
“this extended from a lack of
The most important events and
Murder follows the police
understanding in regards to
actions that show the ways in
investigation of the Hwaseong
the psychological aspects of
which the investigation went
murders. From 1986 to 1991 in
these crimes to the damaging
wrong occur in the basement
the city of Hwaseong, Korea,
public chaos which erupted at
of the police department. The
there were ten cases of rape
the crime scenes.” Memories of
basement is the room where
and murder involving women
Murder takes a fictional look at
the police officers interrogate
strangled with items of their
the investigation in Hwaseong,
the suspected murderers, but
own clothing. While the FBI
exploring and revealing to the
most often a room of torture
Released of
29
his
in
2003,
where the respct for the rule of
seems mentally disabled, scared,
eat noodle soup with the suspect
law and ethical behaviors are
and innocent, both policemen
while watching a TV show and
replaced by the human instincts
drag him to the basement for
then proceed to interrupt their
of
vengeance.
interrogation and Cho Yong-
dinner to violently interrogate
concurrently
koo kicks and beats him while
him again.
This
violence
and
basement
reveals the true identity of the
Park
Doo-man
supposed “good guys” and their
assists. The basement is a
When
failure to reveal the guilt of the
closed space that allows these
in
supposed “bad guys.” This is
characters
such
basement, they undress him
most exemplified in the attitude
unethical interrogation methods.
and mentally torture him until
of detectives Park Doo-man and
In addition, the basement also
he becomes crazy and learns
Cho Yong-koo. After arresting a
shows how unprofessional the
by heart a narrative that the
suspected murderer who clearly
detectives are, as we watch them
detectives have given him. He
to
nonchalantly
employ
the
another
detectives suspect
bring to
the
30
INTERCUT
then proceeds to say it out loud while being recorded to avoid getting beaten up again. “This time let’s be realistic like in a movie shall we?” says detective Park Doo-man before recording. They make him say that the bruise on his forehead is from a rock that one of his victims threw at him to defend herself, while in reality he was bruised by detective Cho Yong-koo 31
during his torture. During the
Joon-ho made the set design a
entirety of the scene, a boiler
core element of his film. The
man comes and goes to the
plot and most of the actions
basement to check the furnace
in the film revolve around the
while the two detectives conduct
same apartment complex. In
the torture on their suspect. This
an interview Bong explained,
detail enhances the absurdity
“When I was little, I did live
of the policemen interrogation
in a house at one point, but
methods.
scene,
mostly, I grew up in apartment
where the detainee is tied to a
complexes. I lived on the ninth
pipe upside down, he’s asked
floor, the thirteenth floor, so I
by another detective if he’s the
lived mid-air. In Korea during
murderer and confirms that he
the 1970s and ‘80s, apartment
is in spite, as he wants to escape
complexes
more torture and the basement.
middle class.” The apartment
These scenes serve to show
complex in the film expresses
once again how the location
the same idea, as the characters
gives
freedom
living in it are middle class
to the detectives who take
people struggling to make ends
advantage of the obscurity, the
meet. The plot focuses on Ko
confinement, and the secrecy of
Yun-ju, a self-pitying professor
the room to act with no moral
desperately looking for a job as
compass and no regards for
a lecturer, who is driven crazy by
ethics and justice. In Memories
the sound of a barking dog lost
of
in the middle of the apartment
In
another
unconditional
Murder, the basement is
therefore a place that allows
symbolized
the
complex.
individuals to develop hubris, avoid the truth, conceal their
Once Ko Yoon-ju finds the
deception, and show their basic
creature, he tries to get rid of
instincts and darkest nature.
it by any means possible and ends up going to the basement
In Barking Dogs Never Bite, his first
and attempting to hang the
feature film as a director, Bong
dog on a pipe but finally locks 32
INTERCUT
33
it up in an abandoned closet.
boshintang—dog
the
Kim” who used to “fix boilers
While this location might seem
basement with dead dogs he
with love and care.” According
irrelevant early on in the film,
finds. The basement gives him
to the legend “boiler Kim” was
the audience quickly discovers
the space and privacy to exercise
killed in the basement and “his
that the basement is home to
this sickening practice. But while
body was put in the wall and
many dubious activities and
he thinks he’s left alone, another
cemented over.” He has since
long-kept mysteries. As he feels
janitor walks in and interrupts
then haunted the place.
guilty, Ko Yoon-ju goes back to
his feast, as Ko Yoon-ju hides
the basement where he has left
in the closet. What ensues is an
After both janitors leave the
the dog. To his surprise the dog
hysterical scene where, in order
basement, Ko Yoon-ju finally
is no longer in the closet but
to scare his colleague away so
comes out of the closet and
on a chopping board. Indeed,
that he can continue carving the
walks through the basement in
the janitor of the apartment
dog, the first janitor makes up a
fear of encountering “boiler
complex has a habit of cooking
tall tale about a certain “boiler
Kim.” As he walks he hears a
stew—in
sound coming from under a pile
the movie a form of comedic
lives and escapes society. He
of abandoned clothes which
relief through the absurdity of
lives underground, far from the
scares him off and makes him
the interactions between the
turmoil of the outside world, in
run away. It is of course not
characters. This location also
constant darkness. His living
“boiler Kim� but a homeless
reveals their many intimate
condition greatly differs from
person who had been living in
secrets, such as strange cooking
the middle class residents of
the basement. Later on in the
habits, animal abuse, or living
the apartment complex who
film, when the janitor leaves
under a pile of clothes.
live higher up in the building,
while his dog stew is simmering,
exposed to the light. Despite
the homeless man eats his food
Beyond the comedic aspect
that, they seem to be the ones
in his absence. The actions
of this location, the basement
complaining, finding problems
occurring
also reveals social disparity. For
and
and
instance, the basement is the
while the homeless man fights
darkness of the location, give
place where the homeless man
for survival. He is forced to
despite
in
the
the
basement,
gloominess
adopting
weird
habits
34
INTERCUT
work with what he has and
Thus, in Barking Dogs Never Bite,
War, and they started to build
therefore eating a dog he found
the basement also serves as a
bunkers in all the buildings,
may have been his only option
site of social injustice.
even in big apartment buildings.
for nourishment. But before he
35
(…) Renting out such semi-
is able to kill it, he is stopped
The Bong Joon-ho film in which
basements as residences was
and arrested. The mystery of
the basement plays the most
illegal for a long time. They
the disappearing dogs in the
important role in symbolizing
were filled with mold and pests,
apartment complex is officially
social disparity is likely Parasite.
and prone to floods; people who
solved according to the TV
In Parasite, the basement is
lived there developed chronic
news outlet who went to the
almost as important as any of
coughs and skin conditions.”
basement to show its viewers
the characters, as it conveys a
At some point, as the economy
where the homeless man and
clear message to the audience
was booming, the government
“dog murderer” lived, and Ko
and is an essential component
decided to legalize these semi-
Yoon-ju and the janitor are left
of
underground
untroubled in the investigation.
journey. The Kim family lives
accommodate workers. But as
Therefore, the homeless man,
in a semi-basement apartment
Gina Kim explains, “that doesn’t
who was peacefully living in
in Seoul. As Gina Kim writes
mean they became desirable,”
the basement ends up taking
in her analysis of the film,
as “people can look into them,
the blame for the actions of
these types of apartments were
(…) pee on the windows, (…)
the deranged janitor and self-
particular to Seoul: “Everyone
park their cars in front of them,
pitying and impatient teacher.
was paranoid after the Korean
blocking whatever little sunlight
the plot and emotional
apartments
to
they have.” In an interview for IndieWire, Bong explains the
the film’s protagonists.” Korea “became
a
wealthy
country
following: “The poorer you
very fast. And people who
are, the less sunlight you have
weren’t able to board that fast
access to, and that’s just how it
train towards wealth, they feel
is in real life as well. You have
lost. And they feel a sense of
limited access to windows. With
inferiority.” The semi-basement
semi-basement homes, you have
crystalizes
very limited sunlight during the
figuratively
day—maybe 15 or 30 minutes—
Indeed, the disadvantages and
and that’s where the film opens.”
unhealthiness
that
inferiority
and
of
literally.
this
living
situation is exemplified when, The semi-basement apartment in Parasite is the primary home for the Kims, a con-artist family of four, who serve, more or less, as the film’s antiheroes. As Bong explains, “these semibasement homes are only half underground.
That’s
very
similar to the psychology of
36
INTERCUT
because of its structure, the
beneath human dignity both
four, as they are each offered
semi-basement
literally and figuratively,” as Jeff
different jobs by the family
York writes in his analysis.
after manipulating them. The
is
flooded
during a rainstorm. As Bong explains,
37
“water
is
flowing
Parks live in an architecturally
from top to bottom, to the rich
In this context, the Kims see
magnificent and grand house
neighborhoods to the poor ones,
no other option but to lie and
in the wealthiest neighborhood
and these characters, they have
deceive in order to survive,
of Seoul, drastically contrasting
no control over it.” Their social
climb the social ladder, and
with the semi-basement of the
condition forces them to live
escape
semi-basement
Kims. The house, designed
underground, with the constant
apartment, the underground. In
by production designer Lee
risk of being engulfed. “They
doing so, the Kims strategically
Ha-jun, was built in such ways
are outcasts in the caste system
infiltrate
of
to show the contrast between
of Korea, the lowest of the low,
the Parks, a wealthy family of
the Parks’ immaculate living
the
the
household
home into a house of horrors for the Kims. Jeff York writes that, “Bong even turns the dark doorway to the basement and its shelter into a metaphorical doorway to hell by shooting it as an indeterminate void of blackness.” In an interview for IndieWire, Lee discussed the importance of the set design
situation
and
the
cockroach-infested
1960, The Housemaid, in which
in conveying a message to
the vertical structures symbolize
the audience. The production
social hierarchy. As the Kims
designer explains, “Mr. Park’s
take over the Parks household,
house is minimal, uncluttered,
their constant climbing up and
large and orderly. It’s a large
down the many staircases in
house with a large garden
the Park home illustrates their
consisting of controlled colors
ascent from the semi-basement
and materials—a contrast to the
and poverty to the magnificent
semi-basement neighborhood. I
house and wealth.
wanted to show the increasing
cramped, of
Ultimately, however, it seems
difference
the Kims’ semi-basement. As
that there is no way for the Kims
areas
Bong explained at the Cannes
to escape their social condition
appearances change from the
Film Festival, the house “has
as even the basement in the
rich house to the semi-basement
a
structure—second
Parks’ house will remind them
neighborhood.” Lee went on to
floor, first floor and basement.
of that in the most dramatic way.
say that the protagonists living
(…) Each space is connected by
Indeed, halfway through the
in this unique structure of semi-
stairs. Our staff jokingly called
film, the Kims discover that the
basement homes is not just to
our work a ‘stair movie.’” The
husband of the housemaid they
show “a very Korean element
movie director said he took the
had gotten fired had been living
of story.” Rather, “there’s a
concept of stairs from Kim Ki-
below the basement for years.
more specific meaning behind
young’s Korean classic from
That revelation turns the Park
it, because the semi-basement is
vertical
reality
density that reflects the class
and
between lower
elevated ones
as
38
INTERCUT
basically the middle of high and
uniquely highlighted by Bong’s
low. There’s this fear that you
use of basements. In Barking Dogs
can fall even further below but
Never Bite, Memories of Murder,
you still feel hope that you’re
and Parasite, basements are used
still half above-ground (…).” In
in various ways and bring about
Parasite, this hope is crushed as
various symbolisms. In Memories
the father of the Kim family is
of Murder, the basement is a no-
ultimately forced into hiding
rights zone, a place for hubris to
in the basement of the Parks’
develop where there is no space
family home, and the mom and
for truth and where man shows
son go back to live in their semi-
his inherent violence. In Barking
apartment basement.
Dogs Never Bite, the basement is a place of secrets, of hiding,
39
Bong Joon-ho is not only a
and comedic relief, but also a
master
cinematography,
location that symbolizes social
screenwriting, and directing, but
injustice. This idea is also
is also an example for aspiring
conveyed in Parasite, in which
directors in regards to his use
the basement is a structure that
of set design. Set design is a key
serves to show social disparities
aspect of Bong’s filmography as
and class conflict. Basements are
his sets are used as a medium to
therefore an essential aspect of
create a physical embodiment
Bong Joon-ho’s cinema as they
of themes and ideas in his
are used to convey themes, ideas
movies. This use of set design is
and emotions to the audience.
of
Bibliography “Cannes Review: With ‘Parasite,’ Bong Joon-Ho Delivers an Electrifying Assessment of Social Stratification.” The Film Stag, 4 June 2019, https:// thefilmstage.com/reviews/cannes-review-with-parasite-bong-joon-hodelivers-an-electrifying-assessment-of-social-stratification/ Newell, Chris, et al. “The Limitations of Law in Memories of Murder (2003).” Scriptophobic, 6 Feb. 2019, https://scriptophobic.ca/2018/11/29/thelimitations-of-law-in-memories-of-murder-2003/ Ulaby, Neda. “The Hit Movie ‘Parasite’ Puts Basement Structures in Structural Inequality.” NPR, NPR, 5 Nov. 2019, https://www.npr. org/2019/11/05/776388423/the-hit-movie-parasite-puts-basementstructures-in-structural-inequality O’Falt, Chris. “Building the ‘Parasite’ House: How Bong Joon Ho and His Team Made the Year’s Best Set.” IndieWire, 29 Oct. 2019, https:// www.indiewire.com/2019/10/parasite-house-set-design-bong-joonho-1202185829/ “‘Parasite’ Mines the Power of Symbolism In One of 2019’s Best Films.” Creative Screenwriting, https://creativescreenwriting.com/parasite-minesthe-power-of-symbolism-in-one-of-2019s-best-films/ Herald. “Director Bong Joon-Ho: Stairs Are a Key Metaphor in ‘Parasite’.” The Korea Herald, The Korea Herald, 22 May 2019, http://www.koreaherald. com/view.php?ud=20190522000759
40
Still A Part of It: WRI T T EN BY HANN AH C ARROLL I LLU ST RAT ED BY LE S LIE ROSARIO-OLIVO
Growing Up New York , New York
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I want to be a part of it New York, New York These vagabond shoes are longing to stray Right through the very heart of it New York, New York
43
THE SAD IRONY OF these “New York, New York� lyrics, written for the film of the same name by John Kander and Fred Ebb in 1977, does not escape me as I sit here at my desk in April 2020, writing this piece from a locked down New York City. I have not left my apartment in more than a month, a privilege in these times, though an enormously frustrating
and
deeply
saddening one. The usually bustling streets are empty, eerily quiet, save for delivery trucks and
the
ambulances
whose
wailing sirens blare as they rush to nearby Mount Sinai Hospital.
I originally intended to write an article about how one grows up with films and how age and acquired life experience reshape our perspectives on those familiar stories. However, being home in New York City, in this version of the City at that, has prompted me to think again about New York, New York, a movie I hold close to my heart. I grew up watching it and have always been enchanted
INTERCUT
Martin Scorsese’s New York, New York is a love letter to MGM’s Freed Unit, but it is also a film that manages to reexamine
loved Old Hollywood musicals,
those works and their more
and
by how each viewing seems to
than occasional tendency to
DVD for me, never having
reveal something new about
become
It
seen it herself. I would watch
the
follows the turbulent love affair
it in tandem with my beloved
virus forced many of us to
between
Jimmy
restored version of Liza with
leave campus and transition to
Doyle and Francine Evans—
a Z. I had no clue what I was
distanced learning, a poster of
played by Robert De Niro and
watching, but I knew I loved it.
the film was proudly displayed
Liza Minnelli, respectively—as
Whatever Francine was doing
above my bed in my freshman
they meet, fall in love, marry,
coming down those stairs with
dorm, reminding me each day
fight and break up—and spoiler
that crepe dress and those
of where I’m from and where
alert—do not get back together.
fantastically oversized sleeves,
I’d like to go— and I don’t just
Along the way, the bus rides and
I wanted to do that. At the
mean home. New York City is a
small-town gigs become big city
same time, I could not for the
feeling as much as it is a place;
ballrooms and, for Francine,
life of me accept that Francine
it follows you throughout your
a chance to make it in the
and
life, whether you’re there or not.
movies! They work together to
(perhaps because I was raised
I feel much the same way about
compose a song, which emerges
on
New York, New York. For me, it
in bits and pieces until the film
was accustomed to that sort of
transcends the confines of the
culminates in Liza belting out
conclusion). I have since come
screen and remains never far
their hit: “New York, New York.”
to love New York, New York’s
characters.
Before
the
hyper-saccharine.
musicians
from my mind, always ready to
45
my
mom
Jimmy
studio-era
bought
never
the
reconcile
musicals
and
ending. It is quiet, it is not
be looped into any conversation
I first saw New York, New York
tied up neatly and followed by
that will accept it.
when I was eight years old. I
a “THE END” title card, and
it is, quite frankly, a reflection of the messiness and grittiness of real life—a perspective that was often absent in the classic Hollywood musical. The real world isn’t always filled with “happy endings” the way movies (read: those old movies) are.
I had watched New York, New York countless times by middle school, when I unexplainably
as she belts out the definitive
set it aside for a few years,
rendition of “But the World
before coming back to it when
Goes
I was around 17. I remember
summoned 2008— and there I
thinking: “Isn’t that the movie
was was, a child again, sitting on
I used to love as a kid?” It’s
the floor, maybe two feet from
“He is such an insufferable ass!”
uncanny the way visuals, color
the television, all but throwing
I remember lamenting to a
palettes even, can bring you
myself into the screen, wanting,
friend. “I just do not understand
back in time,
too, to be a part of it.
why she keeps going back to
conjuring up
‘Round”
uncannily
feelings from moments past that you’d forgotten,
couldn’t
on “I guess it’s love.” But, in
age you never thought you’d
connect in quite the same way.
truth, that conclusion never sat
feel you were again. Maybe
Perhaps it was a side effect
comfortably with me.
it’s my synesthesia acting up,
of my then much practiced
but I’d like to think it’s just the
pseudo-analytical skills which
I
magic of movies, this movie in
I was so accustomed to flexing
again and again to the film
particular. Rewatching New York,
on all literature papers as I
in the months that followed.
New York in the winter of 2017, I
regurgitated “profound” insights
An element of inaccessibility
was eight years old again. The
onto the page, but I simply could
fed
warm-toned
blocking
not and would not accept Jimmy
not
on the walls of the recording
and Francine’s relationship at
characters behaved the way
soundstage that surround Liza
face value the way I had before.
they did only made me want to
color
to an
him!” Confounded, I settled But
this
time,
I
found
my
myself
returning
frustration.
understanding
why
My the
46
INTERCUT
dig in deeper. I was obsessed. I could hardly watch the film without constantly rewinding, picking it apart scene by scene. I grew to appreciate New York, New York, for the way it studies a bygone genre years past its heyday and how beyond being consummately
entertaining,
the film pays homage to classic Hollywood musicals, flaws and all.
In January, I learned that an unseen 35mm print of
the
movie was playing at one of my favorite movie theaters, the Metrograph. I’d never seen New York, New York on the big screen before, so I felt I couldn’t miss
47
the chance. I took the train into
screen and that unmistakable
I marveled at the tracking shot
the City to see it on Saturday,
vamp began, a certain wave of
down the long table of tuxedoed
February 1. While the print
childhood nostalgia swept over
men, their arms gesturing in
turned out to be a bit grainy,
me. I sat there in my seat, toes
canon à la Busby Berkeley. It
the experience made me fall in
tapping, holding myself back as
was hard not to notice these
love again with its old, familiar
best as I could from crying out
grace notes with a print that
charms and gave me reasons to
“Happy Endings” *tambourine
was scaled to nearly life-sized
love the film anew!
shake* “all around me!” along
dimensions.
But
artifice
be
with Francine. But I was also
damned, New York, New York is
As the title card filled the
thinking as a twenty year old.
gritty; it’s somehow real. And it’s
partly why I suspect it flopped
hyper-curated to the umpteenth
when it was first released (and
degree. Yet it evades all tropes
no doubt why two other people
of the movie musical genre,
around my age walked out of
hinging on the fact that its
the theater mid-way through).
audience has probable exposure
It’s not what one expects the
to the very narrative arcs that it
movie to be.
teases but ultimately denies its viewers of. New York, New York
New York, New York is deceptively
is a commentary on film, not a
familiar visually, staged and
criticism. It offers insights that 48
INTERCUT
grow on you with the more
deliberately intended to look
movies you’ve seen. Its many
artificial and because it had the
references,
through
misfortune of being released
subtle visual nods and offerings
just after the smash-hit Star
of familiar chord progressions,
Wars in early summer of 1977.
are there for those who notice
And yet, leaving the theater,
them. Those who feel the slight
after seeing this wonderfully
pang in their chest as they flit
artificial rendering of New York,
by—momentary bouquets to
I walked into the real thing
the celluloid forebears upon
feeling incredibly fortunate and
whom rests the very basis of
proud to call this city home.
achieved
this anti-musical. It does not suggest how those films should
And then, seemingly overnight
have been, but offers a what-
the world and the City changed.
could-have-been, or rather, a
A month later, we began to
glimpse at what was left out of
feel the rising dread; I have
the frame. New York, New York is
now been in lockdown for
entirely reliant on the success,
weeks, not feeling particularly
recognizability and belovedness
a part of anything. Instead,
of the original form of the
I’ve
Hollywood
flipping
extreme and upsetting feeling of
the proverbial script, if for no
disassociation. Several people
other reason than to alert you to
I know have died. There’s a
the reality that you do, in fact,
wartime field hospital in the
expect something from the film.
park where I typically go for
musical,
been
dealing
with
an
mind-clearing walks (or so I’ve
49
New York, New York fell flat in its
read in the news, but I know as
reception in part because critics
much as someone reading from
did not seem to appreciate the
any other place in the world,
staging and production values
since I no longer walk there).
I’m here, but I’m not here, and
of a World War, all of them a
it’s incredibly saddening to feel
part of “it”—New York, New
as though the most you can
York. We are now waging a
contribute is to stay out of the
different kind of war, eagerly
way. That is simply the reality
waiting for its end, so that we
of this fight for many of us.
too can celebrate. We cheer from our windows every day,
But as I’ve said, New York is a
pots and pans clanging, bells
feeling as much as it is a place—
ringing, to raise morale among
which is why, implausibly, so
neighbors
much of the spirit, the chutzpah,
thanks, even if in a small way,
of this city was captured on
for those who venture outside
that decaying MGM backlot
daily, risking their lives to battle
three
away,
on the front lines of emergency
four decades ago. Think of the
rooms, warehouses and grocery
persistence, the resilience, the
stores, to bring this crisis to an
hope embodied in Francine’s
end. The spirit of New Yorkers
journey. Today, life in this city
cannot be dampened. We may
is lived at a remove; there is an
be shut in; the streets, like those
air of artifice about all we do. I
of a dystopian soundstage, may
know that as I sit here, stir-crazy,
echo with sirens and silence, but
muscles atrophying, that I would
through the grittiness, we are
give just about anything to slip
still here, unwavering. That is
on a pair of vagabond shoes and
why I am not alone when I put
step through the heart of it.
my speaker in the window at
thousand
miles
and
to
express
7pm and blare “New York, New New York, New York opens with
York”. It’s an expression of the
billows of confetti falling over
sentiment that never leaves: we
a packed crowd, cheering and
are still a part of it, New York,
dancing, celebrating the end
New York.
50
INTERCUT
Combating Colonial Structures
51
Through Local Senegalese Cinema WRITTE N BY SAM LE TE R
52
INTERCUT
53
SENEGALESE cinema, since
The interference of
its inception with the films of
governmental
Ousmane Sembène in the 60s,
Senegalese
have always been co-produced
autonomous film production and
by French production companies.
impedes Senegalese ownership
France
a
over films. Many Senegalese
colonial hold on Senegalese
auteurs lose distribution rights
filmmaking
to French companies that prefer
has
maintained
by
creating
structures
cinema
in
prevents
financial dependencies on their
showing
production structures, making
making them inaccessible to
it almost impossible to produce
local
a local Senegalese feature film
The financial revenue obtained
without it becoming a Franco-
from such a film’s exploitation
Senegalese
co-production.
will also largely be acquired
This is due to a lack of funds
by the French company if it
provided by the Senegalese
has invested more money in
Ministry
the film’s production. Conflicts
of
Culture—a
their
French
films
Senegalese
abroad,
audiences.
financial reality partly caused
between
Senegalese
by France’s colonial control over
imposed
the country’s economy—which
have also occurred on film sets,
leads to “forced coproductions.”
where condescending French
French
and
technicians
crew members often receive better
treatment.
All
these
factors entail major colonial setbacks
and
diminish
the
development of a localized film industry in Senegal.
Locally
based
Senegalese
initiatives have recently been put in place to combat this colonial framework of film production and distribution. The Ministry of Culture expressed a renewed interest in 2013 by investing one billion CFA francs (a little over $1.7M) towards the promotion of Senegalese cinema, following the successes of Tey by Alain Gomis and La Pirogue by Moussa TourĂŠ.
Recent
involvement significant
governmental proves
film
can
how be
to
model national identity and generate economic capital via a specialized industry. Cinekap, one of the leading production companies
in
Senegal
with
whom I had the opportunity to intern with when studying abroad last semester, is fully aware of this. The company produced the two latest films by Alain Gomis, Tey and FĂŠlicitĂŠ, 54
INTERCUT
which both won the Étalon de Yennenga at the Panafrican Film and Television Festival of Ouagadougou (FESPACO) in Burkina Faso, considered as the most prestigious film festival
in
Africa.
Cinekap
also co-produced Atlantique by Mati Diop, which recently won the Grand Prize at the 72nd Cannes Film Festival (the first Senegalese film in competition at Cannes since 1992).
Since 2013, Cinekap has been running a training program called Up Courts Métrages, which selects fifteen filmmakers based on short film synopses with the aim of producing those films by the end of the program. The training includes a series of
workshops
and
master
classes with specialists from the film industry. It provides an incredible transmission of film knowledge across generations of from
Senegalese
filmmakers,
veteran
technicians
of the Sembène era to new aspiring creators. The program also offers a valorization of Senegalese film heritage and 55
cultural
discussions
around
African film analysis. Overall, Up Courts Métrages represents a crucial initiative for film training and professionalization in a country with no film schools. Cinekap believes that it is only by training people in all sections of film that a solid industry can truly prosper. Thanks to the advent of digital filmmaking, these types of training programs are now more accessible on a local level, without having to travel all the way to France for studios with analog equipment.
The
participants
of
this
edition’s Up Courts Métrages were composed of West African producers
and
Senegalese
directors. One of the goals of the program is to build more Pan-African
co-productions,
particularly with francophone Africa, in order to find new collaborators
to
work
with
outside of French involvement. This
greater
cooperation
between West African partners would shift the locality of production towards a more culturally
African
interest. 56
INTERCUT
Cinekap has already started
interesting point, but it does not
Courts
doing this by working with
capture the full complexity of
admiration towards European
Atlantique,
film financing and production in
and American cinema, rarely
Senegal’s submission for Best
Senegal, as training programs
mentioning
International Feature Film at
such as Up Courts Métrages
or African filmmakers. What
the latest Oscars. However, film
incubate
appears
critic Modou Mamoune Faye
that promote representations
filmmakers is the way in which
questions the nationality of
of
African films approach social
Atlantique. The film’s director,
Senegalese films.
Côte
d’Ivoire
for
African
local
producers
identities
within
to
any
expressed
Senegalese
disturb
themes—keeping
Mati Diop, is Franco-Senegalese,
57
Métrages
in
these
mind,
however, that these are mostly
and Faye states that “the film
The question of locality and
foreign-funded films that may
was 80% financed by foreign
colonial conditioning in Senegal
lack an actual understanding of
funds. Senegal contributed to
also manifests itself
in the
local realities. A critique that I
maybe 20% of the budget. A
exhibition and distribution of
often heard was that African
film
films. When discussing favorite
films are too ingrained in a
of the funds from which it
movies
most
dramatized portrayal of reality
is financed.”1 Faye raises an
of
Up
through tragic social messages,
carries
the
nationality
and
directors,
the participants of
whereas local audiences are
foreign films. One of those
more
cinemas,
the
Téranga
is
drawn
fantasies.
to
Malick
Hollywood Aw,
the
CanalOlympia owned
by
the
director of the Cinema Christa,
entrepreneur Vincent Bolloré
insists that many Senegalese
from
spectators
watch
Canal+, again proving French
African films since they remind
ownership over film enterprises
them of their daily struggles.
in Senegal. Yet a film’s success
Instead, foreign films offer a
in the box office is crucial for
means of escapism.2
a return in investment in order
refuse
to
the
French
company
to subsequently produce more I nevertheless wonder if this
films. If the local public is rarely
preference for foreign cinema
given the option to theatrically
is due to a lack of accessibility
watch any Senegalese films,
for Senegalese films following
then there is no flow of financial
a major reduction of
income,
local
making
it
almost
movie theaters in the last two
impossible to sustain a local
decades. For example, one of
film industry, especially if the
the participants of the program
income that is generated is
confessed never having seen Le
directed towards French-owned
prix du pardon by Mansour Sora
distribution groups.
Wade before it was projected in class and that he had absolutely
Another
loved the poetic nature of the
is linked to distribution in
film. Thus, if African films were
Senegalese cinema is that of
more locally accessible, perhaps
film criticism, to ensure the
they would be more appreciated.
social awareness and historical
It would be challenging to
memory of
find any attraction for one’s
The
cinematic heritage if unaware
ex-president of
of it. Indeed, the two major
Federation of Cinematographic
cinemas in Dakar mostly screen
Critique (FACC), Baba Diop,
Hollywood
expressed that “a film on which
blockbusters
and
key
element
that
a local cinema.
Senegalese
critic
and
the African
1
Faye, Souleymane. 2019. Le blues du cinéma sénégalais. BBC Afrique.
2
Fofana, Amadou T. 2018. “A Critical and Deeply Personal Reflection: Malick Aw on Cinema in Senegal Today”. Black Camera, 9(2). 349-35.
58
INTERCUT
nothing has been written is condemned to be forgotten.”3 Criticism
and
dialogue
surrounding a film can therefore become as important as the film itself. Talking about a film and learning about the themes developed in the film without necessarily seeing it contributes to
generating
sparking
culture
audience
and
interest.
However, very few film critics exist in Senegal. Senegalese filmmaker
Moussa
Touré
suggests that there should be trainings for oral criticism, “in our languages, for local people, even if they haven’t seen the film, to have it orally. Especially in Africa, since we are imagemaking communities: when we speak, we envision the image.”4 In parallel, the FACC has assembled an extensive archive that
is
virtually
accessible
through the database “Africiné,” the largest website in the world specially devoted to African cinema and its diaspora. This initiative
allows
Senegalese
and African spectators to freely research and access their local cinematic heritage. 59
The past few years have also
Courts Métrages often discussed
witnessed
this concern of approaching
an
expansion
of
African film festivals to watch
social
movies
films.
from
the
continent
themes The
in
African
various
projects
and obtain local recognition,
in this session touched upon
reducing
find
social issues such as education,
success abroad. We can mention
health, and women’s rights in
the FESPACO in Burkina Faso,
Senegal. The training program
the
Festival
questioned how to illustrate
in Tunisia, Écrans Noirs in
such aspects of society without
Cameroon, Clap Ivoire in Côte
being overly didactic, or without
d’Ivoire, and more specifically
producing an institutional film,
in Senegal the festivals Image
rather searching for an artistic
et Vie, Dakar Court, Films
vision that offers a creative
Femmes Afrique, Festival Ciné
cinematographic
Banlieue, and Festival Gorée
The
group
Cinéma. All these festivals allow
such
sensible
local audiences to watch the
be
latest productions in African
and
cinema.
avoid
the
Carthage
need
Film
Recently
to
Cinewax
language.
established
portrayed ingenuity
that
topics
should
with
subtlety
in
presenting
order an
to
image
has also established an Online
of the continent that is full
African Film Festival that offers
of
misérabilisme (pessimism).
a selection of 30 African films
“Africa is not only cries and
in the timespan of 30 days to
sorrow,” declared one of the
a sizable online audience. The
participants.
theme of the festival this year was “African dream,” presenting
Numerous
an original thematic approach
discuss the somber reality of
that
migration.
included
science-fiction
Senegalese
This
topic
films
has
and comedy films, other than
often been approached in a
social documentaries.
dramatic and didactic manner, through institutional projects or
Script development within Up
3
Bakrim, Mohammed. 2014. Trois questions à Baba Diop, critique de cinéma. Africiné.
4
Sene, Fatou Kiné. Quelle critique pour un cinéma sans salle? Awotele, La Revue Ciné Panafricaine.
documentary formats that aim to 60
INTERCUT
create awareness. Yet films such
from the period when European
admits that each producer will
as Atlantique mix social realities
companies would only produce
want the film to resemble their
of migration with supernatural
village-set films. Such occidental
own cultural universe. This
elements
imaginative
productions wished to confirm
means that a Senegalese auteur
poetry. Fantasy and humor can
a certain vision of Africa on
might be forced to let go of
come into play in envisioning
the
silver
daily struggles, such as in the
to
authenticate
case of Une place dans l’avion
prejudices.
and
screen,
in
order
certain cultural elements from
their
own
their script due to European pressures. Sall argues that this
by Khadidiatou Sow, a short
61
can be beneficial since it will
film produced by Cinekap that
This exemplifies the type of
make the film more intelligible
imagines absurdist situations
control carried by European
abroad, allowing it international
around a single available seat
co-productions on the written
exposure
onboard a flight to the USA.
content of a film, financing only
cinematographic and economic
These novel stylistic approaches
certain thematics and projected
success on Western recognition.
have created a renewed interest
imagery of Africa destined for
If one argues that the films
from local Senegalese audiences
European audiences. Oumar
are made for an international
and have marked a permutation
Sall,
audience, then it could be
director
of
Cinekap,
and
thus
basing
beneficial to be co-produced
successfully
by a foreign company. Yet I
own films with no external
would suggest that films become
help. Their goal is to reduce
more universally appreciated
unemployment among young
when they are made within
people, especially in the suburbs
a personal or locally specific
of Dakar, to turn their passions
context. Further, to what extent
for film into lucrative jobs. Ciné
are local Senegalese spectators
Banlieue enables a democratic
forgotten
process?
access to cinema by making
Nonetheless, the urban city has
their training programs free.
taken a more significant place
Mr. Boye, one of the founders
in
Senegalese
of the organization, underlines
cinema, such as in Xale Bu
the importance of projecting
Reer by Abdou Khadir Ndiaye
African films in their classes to
(developed through Up Courts
root the participants in their
Métrages) and Tey by Alain
own cultural and filmic heritage,
Gomis, changing the illustrated
encouraging an openness to
narratives of African spaces and
the world while still prioritizing
ideologies.
their films towards a local
in
this
contemporary
produces
its
Senegalese audience. Other exist
local outside
alternatives of
Cinekap’s
The Centre Yennenga, founded
film production and training
by
framework.
major
also serves as a local hub for
institution is the group Ciné
film reflection in Dakar by
Banlieue,
to
regrouping young talents and
socio-economic
assisting them in their filmic
integration for Senegalese youth
ambitions. The goal is similarly
in the film industry through
to make films without massive
training programs. Comprising
budgets, in a personal and non-
a
passionate
conventional approach. Gomis
filmmakers collaborating with
supports a localized cinema
limited means, Ciné Banlieue
for
facilitate
group
One
which
of
aims
director
Alain
Senegalese
Gomis,
audiences, 62
INTERCUT
suggesting
that
too
much
island.
by
importance is given towards
personally obtaining financial
international film circuits. He
and technical means to make
condemns the over-emphasis on
feature length projects, has also
film “pitches” in film production,
become more popular with the
stating that in very few words,
example of Baamum Nafi by
the pitch rapidly turns into
Mamadou Dia, recently prized
a sensationalist narrative on
at the Locarno Film Festival. The
social issues. Overall the Centre
director has stated that the “this
Yennenga hopes to find new
film is first and foremost made
independent ways of funding
by Senegalese people and for
film projects, without being
Senegalese people,”5 specifically
dependent on French subsidies.
thanks to its financial autonomy.
One way of going about that
Finally, the recent popularity of
is by installing their own post
Senegalese TV shows such as
production equipment in order
Golden and Maitresse d’un homme
to eliminate the overpriced costs
marié has created a renewed
of French studios.
local interest for Senegalesemade
and
Wolof-speaking
The Maison Gorée Cinéma,
content. Although some major
based
Senegalese filmmakers criticize
Gorée,
on
the
island
represents
of
another
the
lack
of
professionalism
local initiative that focalizes
from short turnarounds behind
on African culture and its
the production value of these
diaspora. Gorée Cinéma has
shows, other figures such as
already
multiple
Yanis Gaye, one of the founders
discussions,
of the Maison Gorée Cinéma,
organized
retrospectives,
projections, and festivals thanks
encourages
to the subsidies provided by the
initiatives as a way to allow
Senegalese Ministry of Culture,
young people to gain experience
investing
in
on set and to demonstrate that
equipment
and
autonomous configuring
its own visioning space on the 63
Self-production,
local
these
content
profitable.
is
television
financially
These
recent
independent, production
initiatives localized
bring
hope
in film for
the future of an autonomous Senegalese film industry. Yet the reality today remains that if a Senegalese filmmaker wishes to make a film with a significant budget, they will need to resort to foreign, primarily French, funding. We are left asking how these filmmakers can remain open
to
support
external while
autonomous
financial
maintaining
creativity
and
ownership within their own locality. As expressed by Alain Gomis, who considers himself as a “cultural dialogue by nature” due to his Franco-Senegalese origins,
cultural
through
Franco-Senegalese
co-productions be
dialogue
should
mandatory.
not
Alternative
measures stated above have recently been put in place, but a
complete
turnaround
of
Senegalese film production and distribution might require more time and patience.
5
To allow a purely localized film
industry
in
Thoubou, Mame Woury. 2019. Mamadou Dia, réalisateur de «Baamum Nafi» : «Nous sommes une génération qui récolte ce que les aînés ont semé». Sencinema.
Senegal, 64
many Senegalese filmmakers
Courts
believe that they must first
Banlieue, but there have also
focus on film training and
been recent talks of creating
the
of
the country’s first film school to
Other
accompany the new generation
professionalization
audiovisual
Ciné
of
Pan-African
A decolonial film industry would
collaboration, the
Senegalese
and
factors include forming stronger
reconfiguring
65
careers.
Métrages
filmmakers.
treatment
allow aspiring filmmakers to
of African themes to create
learn film at home, without
greater interest among local
feeling that success is reliant
audiences, and sustaining more
on French film schools and
theatrical spaces for the viewing
governmental institutions. Such
of local content. The future of
cultural agency would mark a
Senegalese cinema is currently
strong deepening of national
dependent on the quality of
independence within Senegal’s
training programs such as Up
rich cinematic history.
66
INTERCUT
Screenwriting Interviews
E DITE D BY JULIA LE VINE I L LU ST RAT ED BY SI VA N PIATIGORS K Y-ROTH
67
WHAT IS IT LIKE to write a script from start to finish? To fill the blank page with sparkling dialogue, compelling stories, and living people? As the production students ran around campus and beyond with their cameras and crews, a far less visible group of seniors were typing away at their screenplays and television pilots, answering these very questions. This lesser known thesis group spent the year writing and re-writing, and we’d like to bring them out from behind their keyboards and into the spotlight. The following interviews take a look at each writer’s unique process and the triumphs, trials, and tribulations they faced along the way.
68
INTERCUT
Kaira Robertson Arcadon TE L E P L AY
ON HER PREMISE: It started with a Hawaiian ritualistic ceremony from
the
ON ARRIVING AT HER
has
now
PROJECT:
ON CHALLENGES:
a
post-
I originally wanted to do a
I was a little naive coming into
dystopian future grounded in
production thesis really badly…
it. I kind of live with a mindset
environmental collapse, so it’s
but I’m a double major and a
like if you believe it’ll happen
leaps and bounds from where
student athlete so I would’ve
it will… [My series has been
it began, and I’m not entirely
had to choose between doing
particularly hard because] I’m
sure how the idea developed…
that and doing a sport. I
world-building everything. If
I knew I wanted to write about
[ultimately] decided to do a
I change one thing I have to
the environment and where it’s
written thesis and I chose the
rewrite so many scenes. I didn’t
going and how political and
teleplay because I think that if
realize what I was getting into
socioeconomic systems play into
you can get someone hooked
in any capacity… The time
that.
on one [episode] you can get
commitment
them hooked on everything. You
think, not even write, just sit and
can delve into a story in ways
think about things can be very
that films can in some ways be
frustrating.
1600s and been
that
adapted
to
inhibited.
69
and
having
to
ON HER IDEAL THESIS
ON ADVISING:
CONDITIONS:
One thing that I really respect
I’m more of a person who works
about my thesis experience is
in long stretches of time. Once
that Joe, he’ll always believe in
you’re in it, you’re in it. And I
you when you don’t, and that’s
usually listen to classical music.
not something I think I’ve really
It puts me in a zone. I would say
experienced before… and I
if I need inspiration during my
appreciate the fact that Joe’s a
work sessions, I’ll watch another
really good sounding board. [He
TV show and see what they did
showed me that] you can make
and read their script alongside.
anything work. It’s just how you write it.
ON A FAVORITE ASPECT OF HER PROJECT:
WISDOM FOR FUTURE
A lot of what I’ve been working
SCREENWRITERS:
on is trying to imply things
Be confident and write to what
through dialogue, mostly threats.
you know. And know that the
It’s been really fun writing with
process is gonna be really long
the
but
and really hard and you might
having this underlying meaning
think you know what you’re
underneath and knowing that
doing but you don’t. But Joe will
the audience will be able to pick
get you there, and if you want it
up on it… You can create so
enough you’ll get there.
ostensible
dialogue
much complexity through that.
70
INTERCUT
Dani Rodriguez Out of Water TELEPLAY ON HIS PREMISE: It follows this character named
71
Rick Silva who was a former
ON HIS PROJECT’S EVOLUTION:
marine and goes to a liberal arts
What changed is my voice
blows every other position in
college. We kind of see him go
became clear… I think before
Hollywood out the door. Writers
through this world transitioning
it was a little bit more coarse.
are at the tip of the spear cause
from military life to college life
It wasn’t as intelligent as I think
they’re creating this world from
and all the funny things that
it is now… I have a newfound
their mind… This is the ground
happen to him along the way.
respect for writers in a way that
zero.
ON WHAT HE’S LEARNED:
ON HANDLING STRESS:
This has developed a really
One of the things I struggled
that… [It was hard] to be this
strong base in understanding
with is understanding anxiety.
big bad marine, or feel like
why I’m doing anything in my
I never thought stress could
you’re a big bad marine, and
life. Asking those questions like
manifest in a physical form. And
physically you’re very proficient,
“What am I trying to say? How
so the first panic attack I had,
and all of a sudden your mind’s
am I trying to say it? Why is this
my heart started beating and
working against that, and then
important?” It’s changed me.
my vision narrowed to the point
your body’s working against
where I thought I was gonna pass
that… Out of that process I
out, and I was driving in the car,
learned to be very forgiving of
my daughter is in the back, and
myself. How to really take care
I had to pull over… I thought I
of myself mentally, how to talk
was legitimately having a heart
myself down and tell myself that
attack because I never felt like
I am a writer, I am good enough.
WISDOM FOR FUTURE SCREENWRITERS: It wouldn’t even be my advice, it would be advice that everybody gave me throughout my entire time at Wesleyan… Write what you know. Since I was writing from what I knew, it was easy to find the funny, to find the scene, to find what worked, what didn’t work… Write something that speaks to your heart and just go with it.
ON CHALLENGES:
ON ADVISING:
The hardest part for me was
[Joe] can kinda feel you out and
making it all fit together. I can
understand what exactly you
come up with really small scenes
need and how to get at the core
that are good but to tie it into
of you… and he’s so down to
each other and create what
earth. He can be sophisticated
I’d call the connections or the
and then get in the dirt… it’s
ligaments between the muscles
almost daunting to think that
is extremely difficult… And even
we’re graduating and he’s not
being a marine. Like going to
going to be there. Even though
Iraq and Afghanistan was easy
I do feel prepared. I do feel
for me, man. This thesis was the
confident. He’s given me a really
hardest thing I’ve ever done.
strong base.
72
INTERCUT
Julia Levine Astrid & Lucy TELEPLAY
ON HER PREMISE: It’s a half hour comedy and the
gets kicked out of her assisted
daughter and granddaughter.
pilot is two parallel storylines.
living home. So we’re following
And the rest of the series follows
What happens is this nine year
the events that lead up to each
Astrid and Lucy helping each
old girl, Lucy, gets suspended
of them getting in trouble…
other work out their issues and
from school on the same day
At the end of the episode, the
also having different adventures
that her grandmother Astrid
grandmother moves in with her
and mischief together.
There aren’t many tv shows
and I’m very close with them…
you you’re too young to do stuff
with protagonists under ten or
and I started seeing all of these
alone, or telling you you’re too
older than seventy, so there’s a
parallels between being nine
old to drive and taking away
lot to explore… I spend more
and being seventy-nine. People
the car keys. I wanted to write
time around older people than
are always trying to take away
characters who push back and
the average person my age. My
your agency, even if it’s well
say, no we’d actually like to have
great aunts are in their nineties
intentioned. Adults are telling
control over our lives.
ON HER INSPIRATION:
73
ON A FAVORITE CHARACTER:
ON ADVISING:
I
I can’t thank Joe enough…
get you past that standstill. And
grandmother. She’s very snarky
With screenwriting you’re sort
that’s a huge gift because once
and sometimes kind of abrasive
of stuck until you know the
you really understand why a
and mean, and she really lives
underlying objectives of a scene,
scene needs to exist and what it
life to the fullest… I get to write
and Joe somehow figures out
needs to accomplish, you’re free.
lines for her that I would never
exactly what questions to ask to
Then you can write it.
love
writing
Astrid,
the
say myself and get her into trouble I’d be too afraid to get myself into. ON CHALLENGES:
WISDOM FOR FUTURE SCREENWRITERS:
Making it feel like a full,
Read as many scripts as you
have no ideas, don’t try to write,
complex season with strong
can. Especially bad ones. I
just go on a walk for a hour
character arcs was hard. I knew
wrote coverage all summer for
without your phone and spend
I wanted the story to really
an internship before starting
the whole time thinking. That’s
build across episodes but for a
my thesis and it was so helpful.
actually how I came up with
while I didn’t know how to do
Picking apart other people’s
my pilot. A lot of this project
that. What worked was basically
scripts and having to explain
isn’t about the writing, it’s just
writing down a list of character
what’s working and what’s not is
spending time with yourself,
relationships and threads that I
great prep to write your own…
figuring out what you want to
wanted in there and then just
And if you ever feel like you
say.
going through, mapping it, and making sure there was at least one moment in every episode which was building up each of the threads.
74
INTERCUT
ON HIS PREMISE:
ON HIS INSPIRATION:
ON HIS PROJECT’S
I’m working on a political
I was taking a class about
EVOLUTION:
dramedy… It focuses on this
modern narratives about slavery
I wanted to see what would
twenty-one year old black guy
and my professor mentioned
happen if I took this character
named
who
Fred Hampton. He was in the
Calvin and said what if this
grew up with a very privileged
Panther Party in Chicago. He
guy goes from being a nobody
background and because of that
was on the path to become
to a super popular nationwide
he’s been sort of isolated from
this big bold new revolutionary
political figure… I’m trying to
how bad racism is and never
leader, and because of that
play with the idea that while it
thought about it as something
the FBI was surveilling him
is about Calvin learning how
that he has to really worry
and eventually had him killed
racism works and how to work
about. In contrast, his younger
because they thought he was a
against it, he’s also ultimately a
brother Jason has been actively
danger to the establishment.
college kid, he’s not this master
Calvin
Green
stopping injustices in any way
political organizer, he’s going
they come up in his life… [Jason
[The story of Fred Hampton]
into this whole thing blind, so
is then killed by a police officer]
stood out to me so much. I don’t
how do you balance regular
and it’s a massive wake up call
know why it was setting these
responsibilities
for Calvin. In the aftermath of
bells off in my head, but it was
college kid with this unexpected
his brother’s death, he resolves
like for some reason this story
burden put on you when you
to do whatever he can to make
had been brought to me and
feel like you have this calling to
sure what happened to Jason
this is the story that I need to be
do this thing that’s greater than
doesn’t happen to anyone else.
telling right now.
yourself ?
of
being
Chris Jackson The Party TELEPLAY 75
a
ON FEELING LIKE A ONE MAN WRITER’S ROOM: There was one of my episodes I was stuck on and I called a friend of mine and just talking to someone else I realized this
ON ADVISING:
entire process is so difficult
It’s been legitimately amazing.
when you’re just trying to do it
[Joe] really has a way of
alone… TV and movies aren’t
drawing things out of you and
WISDOM FOR FUTURE
written in a vacuum. You don’t
helping you understand what
SCREENWRITERS:
gain
closing
you need to be doing. I’ve had a
Make sure to have a plan, but
yourself off to other people’s
lot of creative writing professors
don’t shackle yourself
opinions, you get in your own
but I feel like there hasn’t been
The thing about this work is
head and that only amplifies
anyone who’s pulled out my best
that inspiration can come from
your personal blind spots.
work like he has.
anywhere.
anything
from
to it.
76
INTERCUT
ON HER PREMISE:
ON PACING:
It’s a really really personal story
It basically takes place over a
for me… It’s set in a small,
week. I didn’t really set out to
swampy town in Florida, sort
write it in that way in terms of
of at the very end of hurricane
being like this is Monday, this is
season, and it follows an eleven
Tuesday, but it ended up being
year old girl named Casey,
that way… Once you’re in it,
and there’s a lot going on in
and once you’re with this family,
her life. She’s got the chaos
you can’t leave. You can’t go
of
the natural environment
anywhere until the movie’s over.
which is uncontrollable and
If there were to be a day where
unpredictable, and then her
you’re gone you would have to
home
know what happened.
environment
is
very
chaotic as well. She’s dealing with the sudden loss of her dad.
ON CHALLENGES:
And her mom is really struggling
I am a huge procrastinator. With
to keep things together. She’s
all of my writing that I do, I do
struggling
it the morning of or the night
alcoholism…
[Casey] had to grow up really
before… I procrastinated doing
fast… everything about her
my outline for weeks. For some
life has changed but she’s still
reason it was the hardest part
eleven and around other eleven
for me… I came back to school
year olds… So there’s a lot of
early in January and pretty
that contrast too between how
much sat down for four days
much people around her can
straight, and just took like eight
really understand what is going
hours, wrote the whole outline,
on and how her worldview has
and wrote the whole thing.
changed.
77
with
Ginger Hutchinson Taking the Day SCREENPLAY ON SCREENWRITING VS OTHER WRITING:
ON TAKEAWAYS:
ON ADVISING:
It’s different in the technical
The most valuable thing I’ve
[Joe] really made me feel like
way, it’s not different in the
learned is just the ability to cut…
this is something I can do with
subject
always
At this point it’s so much easier
my life and something I can do
writing about Florida and I’m
for me to look at a scene and
for a living and it’s not just a
always writing about childhood.
say it’s gone, it’s not pushing the
fantasy. I love how gentle he was
Pretty much all of my creative
story forward, I don’t need it…
with it. I don’t think I could’ve
work lives in that town… I do
[keeping up] that momentum
written this with another advisor.
think it’s kinda similar to poetry
is a great skill in any kind of
I was able to trust him.
though because both can be
writing.
matter.
I’m
really really visual. Like with
WISDOM FOR FUTURE
screenwriting there really can’t
SCREENWRITERS:
be any sentence or phrase that
Take the opportunity to develop
doesn’t connect to an image.
your style and your craft and your idea. Once you go out into the world, once you graduate from college, it’s gonna be hard to find another opportunity where you have a one on one mentor who guides you through this.
78
INTERCUT
Nick McCarthy Monstra ON HIS PREMISE: I have a pathological fear of
SCREENPLAY
modern social media and of saying or doing something that will make everyone find out where I live and then hurt me… You see this happen where someone will say something and then Reddit and 4chan explode and they decide let’s
79
make this person miserable, let’s
ON HIS PROJECT’S
ruin their life. And that’s such a
EVOLUTION:
ON TONE:
fear that exists now that didn’t
It changed remarkably little. I
I maintain that if you are
exist twenty years ago… So I
took a lot of time to say okay,
writing something that involves
wanted to write a story from
I’m gonna be stuck with this
the internet and it is not funny
the point of view of someone
thing for a really long time so I
in some way there’s a problem.
who gets doxxed, someone who
better like it… Over the summer
I hope my script is scary, maybe
isn’t really a tech person. And
I came up with a central idea
people will laugh at the whole
you’re basically being attacked
that wasn’t character specific, it
thing, but I think it’s mostly
by hundreds of people you’ve
wasn’t location specific, it was a
pretty scary. I based the tone on
never met and that feeling
situation I liked. I didn’t know
the really weird feeling it gave
of fear when you can’t really
what would happen, but I knew
me to look into the ugly parts of
punch back.
what it was about.
the internet.
ON CHALLENGES:
ON EDITING:
This is not a traditional horror
Winter break was insane. It was
movie because you’re dealing
a lot of hitting a wall and then
with a really abstract villain.
desperately building my way
You don’t even really know what
over the wall in the last week and
it is. So I immediately started
a half. It feels like I’m control
watching films that were able
demolition-ing a building where
to visualize something like that.
it’s like, how do we TNT this
It’s hard to make something as
part without bringing down the
weird as the internet digestible.
whole thing?
ON SCREENWRITING
WISDOM FOR FUTURE
VS OTHER WRITING:
SCREENWRITERS:
This is way more technical. You
Pace yourself and you’ll be fine.
have to be so lean. It trains you
And don’t work out anything
to think really economically
plot mechanics related at all
about what you’re putting down.
before you start it. Your idea is gonna morph so much. So
ON ADVISING:
just think of a singular concept
The biggest miracle of this is
where you’re like, I absolutely
Joe. He’s so clear on every small
love this.
thing that has to be done for that week. Joe is really good at not giving you his vision. He is so bent on making clear what you want from the script and what you think is a good idea, and I really like that.
80
INTERCUT
Hannah Cooper On Belonging
SCREENPLAY
ON HER PREMISE:
ON HER INSPIRATION:
There’s the version of
81
my
My first semester at Wes, my
Any time somebody finds out
thesis pitch when I’m drunk at
German professor mentioned
that I’m Jewish and that I’m
a party and then the version I
the concept of the German
studying German, they just
tell people when I’m sober, but
western. I thought that was
assume it has to do with the
either way it’s about a seven-
so
having
Holocaust. At some point, I
year-old boy who just moved
grown up in the Southwest.
figured that since nobody would
with his family to Phoenix,
And it’s interesting to think
stop asking me about this, I
Arizona, from Germany in the
about in terms of
German
would write about it. Nobody
mid 70s. He becomes friends
guilt and the way Germany
ever talks about what we do
with a Jewish girl in his class,
has taken accountability for
after the war, how Germans
and their friendship forces both
the Holocaust, the depth to
and Jews should communicate
families to deal with how guilt
which they’ve integrated it into
and exist together, and so that’s
and
function
their education system. And
what my project is really about.
with events that they weren’t
juxtaposing that to America’s
It’s not about the Holocaust, it’s
directly involved in but that
total lack of accountability in
about the aftermath.
really define their cultures.
our own history.
accountability
funny,
especially
ON ADVISING: I wasn’t sure whether to do a production thesis or a screenplay, and I spent five minutes in [Joe’s] class
junior year and
ON CHALLENGES:
knew I had to work with him.
One thing that Joe keeps telling
There’s no one like him. He
me is that I’m too subtle and
takes the time to understand
that’s been a struggle. That
who you are and what you want
happens at least once every
to write, and he helps you do it.
meeting. I’m just trusting my audience too much. Finding
WISDOM FOR FUTURE
ways
SCREENWRITERS:
to
express
characters’
interiority… it’s not easy.
Know why your story needs to be written. Knowing your
ON A FAVORITE CHARACTER:
purpose
I love writing the little Jewish girl,
easier. Whenever you’re stuck
Rachel. She’s seven and wears a
or struggling or unhappy with
cowboy hat everywhere, all the
whatever direction you’re going,
time. It’s really fun to write her
remember why you wanted to
weird little monologues.
write it in the first place.
makes
everything
82
INTERCUT
King Emeka Fall From Grace
ON HIS PREMISE: It’s about the coming of age of a young black boy in LA and he’s kind of stuck between two
SCREENPLAY
worlds. He’s from an upper middle class background but his mother, because she came up from more humble beginnings
83
in the same area, she kinda
ON CHALLENGES:
stayed around there, got her
The only real deadline we
we were going back to school
professional job, but still made
had that’s like a hard point of
I’d planned a trip to Hong
him go to the public school in
no return type thing is that
Kong, and I ended up leaving a
the rougher area… The movie
deadline when you come back
lot of my writing to have to do
is three parts. It’s his middle
from winter break and you
when I was there. And I got sick
school, high school, and then
have to have your first draft.
right around the time we were
right after college, and it shows
And if you don’t have that then
supposed to turn [the entire first
how
his
you can’t move on [to the next
draft] in. And it was crazy. I felt
identity and also what he wants
semester]. So I’d gotten most of
like I was gonna die but I still
to do and what he wants to be
the way through and then I hit a
wrote it. I still got it done. That
in life.
slump. Then three weeks before
was a very memorable time.
he
grapples
with
ON ADVISING: [I enjoy the] moments with Joe when we have realizations and he teaches me something new. He doesn’t give the same advice to everyone. He puts in the effort to understand your story and where you’re coming from. He reminds me a lot of my dad cause he started in theater and my dad teaches acting and directing at Oberlin College, so we kinda connect talking about plays. And his mannerisms. I feel like I’m learning from an Italian version of my dad. WISDOM FOR FUTURE SCREENWRITERS: Marinate, and really sit on whatever you want to write ON STAYING FOCUSED:
ON EDITING:
about. And make sure it’s
It’s just hard to keep up with
I left cutting pages for the last
something
everything… Like I was writing
couple weeks and… It didn’t
about or can be passionate
a different story at a certain
take me crazy amounts of time
about… Everyone has a unique
point and I had to keep asking
but I definitely underestimated
voice. And that sounds really
myself “Is this what I set out to
it. That is not an easy thing to
cliche but if you can tap into
say originally?” or “Is this the
do, especially when you’re so
whatever is unique about you,
same movie that I envisioned?”
tied to all these different things
then I think your story will end
and it was easy to get away from
you’ve invested in and spent
up being really cool… If you’re
that at times, but having Joe and
hella energy trying to create.
considering [doing a thesis] and
you’re
passionate
re-reading it helped me realize
you’re reading this, do it. Just
and not make that mistake.
do it. 84
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